Wichita Falls Considering Chemical for Drought Relief

Wichita Falls Considering Chemical for Drought Relief

Desperate to keep what precious little water remains in its reservoirs, Wichita Falls may turn to an "evaporation suppressant" for help. The state environmental agency says the substance is safe, but the city must still figure out how to use it effectively to limit evaporation from its quickly drying lakes.

Desperate to keep the precious little water left in its reservoirs from evaporating, the city of Wichita Falls may turn to a chalk-like powder for help.

City officials are hopeful that a biodegradable polymer approved by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality could suppress lake water evaporation by up to 30 percent when it is applied to the lake's surface. If trial runs are successful, the City Council could decide whether to buy a 75-day summer supply that would cost about $400,000.

Wichita Falls is experiencing the worst period of drought in its history, and city leaders have tried everything from stringent water restrictions to cloud seeding and reusing wastewater to conserve existing water resources and create new ones. If the city can figure out how to effectively distribute the evaporation suppressant, City Councilman Ben Hoover said, "I think we would at least look at it.”

While the logistics of spreading the powder over thousands of acres of water are still being worked out, Russell Schreiber, the city’s public works director, stressed that the chemical was safe and would not interfere with recreational activities at Lake Arrowhead — one of three reservoirs Wichita Falls relies on for water — where the trial would begin.

“It’ll dissipate on top of the water and just form a clear kind of sheen,” Schreiber said.

Andrea Morrow, a spokeswoman for the TCEQ, said Wichita Falls' request was the first time the agency had approved use of an evaporation suppressant. The agency determined that “it is unlikely that this product will have a deleterious effect on unit processes for drinking water treatment.”

Wichita Falls' reservoirs have fallen to roughly 20 percent capacity since the drought began in 2010. Locals in the North Texas town of about 100,000 people have responded with unprecedented water conservation measures, including a ban on outdoor watering and pool refilling, plus surcharges for heavy water users. Combating natural water loss to evaporation is a new alternative for a city that is running out of options. During the unrelenting summer heat, the sun can sap more than twice as much water per day as all municipal users — about 100 million gallons, according to the Texas Water Development Board, which has predicted that Lake Arrowhead could dry up by November 2015.

“We cannot conserve our way out of this drought,” Darron Leiker, Wichita Falls' city manager, said at a drought forum last week hosted by the Water Development Board and the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration.

That has forced locals to get creative, implementing a wastewater reuse system and investing $300,000 in cloud seeding to try to increase rainfall.

Summer’s onset has lent a renewed sense of urgency to the situation. Rates of evaporation spike between July and August, when 100-degree weather can persist for weeks at a time.

But the logistics of spreading the evaporation suppressing powder are challenging. Schreiber said the city would need to distribute about 5,000 pounds of it by boat every three days across the lake’s 6,000-acre surface. A recent test run proved unsuccessful when 40-mile-per-hour winds interfered with dispersal.

Scientists at the drought forum warned that rising temperatures associated with climate change may hasten evaporation from surface water reservoirs in coming years.

Mark Shafer, director of climate services for the Southern Climate Impacts Planning Program, offered this warning: “With climate change, the thing is to be thinking of it and taking it as a real threat and not just kind of dismissing it. The higher temperatures and higher evaporation rates can lead us into these kind of droughts, so that is a big concern.”